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I have got an activity where the user can enter host name, user name and password and then click on a "Verify credentials" button. Then the credentials will be checked, which will take some time. In the meantime the user should neither be able to change the credentials nor to click on "Verify" again. So, a modal dialog like the ProgressDialog seems perfect for this.

Unfortunately, ProgressDialog has the well-know limitations regarding orientation changes etc. The guide (UI/Dialogs) tells to avoid ProgressDialog at all and use a ProgressBar in the layout instead (like in Progress & Activity). What does this mean? Shall I create another activity with just one progress bar? Or disable all input fields and put a progress bar on top of it? Sounds quite weird to me... whats your preferred solution?

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  • Just a small advice in case you didn't know, if your layout is not too complicated, you can use setContentView as many times as you want.
    – Luke Vo
    Aug 18, 2013 at 15:16

3 Answers 3

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Best thing which I use is:

Put a ProgressBar just beside the Login Button.

I have put a progressbar beside it(Whose visibility is set to View.GONE) in the OnCreate method.

When the user clicks on the Login/Submit button, I set the visibility of the button to View.GONE and visibility of ProgressBar to View.VISIBLE.

It looks good and the user cannot click on the button until the work is done, If an error occurs, toggle the visibility to let the user try again

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  • Your answer is nice, but when the orientation will be changed, all the components will be in their initial states. Aug 18, 2013 at 15:21
  • onResume will be called before the onCreate for the first time and at that time all the initializations that are done in onCreate will be null. So it will generate a NPE (Null pointer Exception) Aug 18, 2013 at 15:23
  • Set a flag variable (boolean) to true whenever the user clicks on Login Button. In the OnResume method, check if the variable is true. If true, show the ProgressBar and Hide the Button. This will work :) @SalmanKhakwani Aug 18, 2013 at 15:24
  • That will definitely work my friend. But it is a bad practice. Aug 18, 2013 at 15:32
  • 2
    @SalmanKhakwani: In which world (case) will onResume be called before onCreate? I fear you are not very familiar with the Android Activity lifetime cycle. Read more on the Activity life cylcle at developer.android.com/reference/android/app/Activity.html
    – Tseng
    Aug 18, 2013 at 17:19
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Like @micro.pravi mentioned in his answer, you can implement the ProgressBar inside your layout. To keep the state after an orientation change you have to use onSaveInstanceState and onRestoreInstanceState to save and restore important values, i.e. private variables, like the private boolean isChecking

public class MyActivity extends Activity {
    public boolean isProcessing;

    @Override
    public void onCreate(Bundle stateBundle) {
        super.onCreate(stateBundle);
        // Set Layout
        setContentView(R.layout.main);

        if(stateBundle!=null) {
            // read your data here from the bundle
            isProcessing =  stateBundle.getBoolean("isProcessing");
        }

        setUiState(isChecking);
    }

    @Override
    protected void onRestoreInstanceState(Bundle stateBundle) {
        // Second value of getBoolean is the default value
        isProcessing =  stateBundle.getBoolean("isProcessing", false);
        super.onRestoreInstanceState(stateBundle);
    }

    @Override
    protected void onSaveInstanceState(Bundle stateBundle) {
        // Save the critical data
        stateBundle.putString("isProcessing", isProcessing);
        super.onSaveInstanceState(stateBundle);
    }
    @Override 
    protected onResume() {
        setUiState(isProcessing);
    }
    private setUiState(boolean processing) {
        textView.setEnabled(!processing);
        button.setEnabled(!processing);
        progressbar.setVisibility(processing?View.VISIBLE:View.GONE);
    }
}

This should be used to saved any critical data on orientation change or when the App is being killed and later restored by the OS. You don't have to save your TextView data, as the defautl View elements already handle this by themselves. Also do not store Image data this way. Instead store the Uri or path to the Url and load it on restore

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For temporarily solving your problem, you can continue using the Progress Dialog and put this line in your Login Activity's tag in Manifest.xml file :

android:configChanges="orientation|keyboardHidden|screenSize"

Using this line of code will not affect the Progress Dialog on orientation changes. But it is considered a wrong practice according to Android Development's Documentation.

In the long run, i recommend you to Preserve the states for orientation changes.

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  • Thanks, I have already found the ways how to use ProgressDialog nevertheless. But I wonder how the intended Android 4+ way of showing a progress while disabling user input?
    – junique
    Aug 18, 2013 at 15:36
  • You should just restore and preserve the states for handling orientation changes and using the Progress Dialog is just fine way of letting the user know that the activity is doing some important processing :] Aug 18, 2013 at 15:38
  • May i know the reason for down-voting my answer ? Aug 18, 2013 at 15:41

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